- St. Charles Avenue
St. Charles Avenue is a thoroughfare in
New Orleans, Louisiana . It is the home of the world famousSt. Charles Streetcar Line . It is also famous for the hundreds ofmansion s that adorn the tree-lined boulevard for much of the Uptown section of the route. The southern live oak trees were added in the early twentieth century, as they were on Carrollton and Napoleon ave, Canal, and many other New Orleans streets, becoming one of the city's most memorable features. It is also famous as aMardi Gras parade route.The street
The down river end meets Canal Street. Across Canal Street in the
French Quarter the equivalent street is Royal Street. From Canal Street St. Charles runs up through theNew Orleans Central Business District , then the length ofUptown New Orleans ,reflecting the crescent curve of theMississippi River some distance inland. It continues to the Carrollton neighborhood, ending one block above Carrollton Avenue where it intersects with Leake Street/River Road at the foot of the Mississippi River levee.From Canal Street to Lee Circle, St. Charles Avenue is one way in the upriver direction with two lanes of traffic, with the
streetcar track sharing right-of-way with one lane of auto traffic. From Lee Circle to Louisiana Avenue it has two lanes of traffic in each direction with two streetcar rail lines on the grassy tree lined median ("neutral ground" in local parlance). From Louisiana Avenue to Carrollton Avenue it has one lane of traffic in each direction plus the streetcar neutral ground. The streetcar line turns inland at Carrollton Avenue to follow the thoroughfare, while the final stretch continues the final short block to River Road.Major Intersections, from east to west, include: Canal Street, Poydras Street, Howard Avenue, Martin Luther King Jr. Blvd./Melpomene Ave, Jackson Avenue, Louisiana Avenue, Napoleon Avenue, Jefferson Avenue, Nashville Avenue, Broadway Street, Carrollton Avenue, and Leake Avenue.
History
For the first half of the 19th century, the portion of St. Charles above Lee Circle (then "Tivoli Circle") was known as "Nyades Street". The lower portion, below the circle, was and is an important corridor through downtown; buildings include
Gallier Hall , City Hall for a century until the 1950s.The street was laid out atop a slight rise, the remains of an old natural levee, in connection with the construction of the New Orleans & Carrollton Railway, which became the St. Charles Streetcar line.
The long traffic avenue with mass transit running down the center helped fuel the development of Uptown in the 19th century. The Avenue itself became the favored site for construction of mansions of the wealthy thru the early years of the 20th century.
A number of the old mansions were torn down in the mid and late 20th century until the area was declared an historic district. Many of the old mansions have been divided into apartments or condominiums, and others have found new use as homes for business, small hotels, and a library, but others remain privately owned single residences.
In early 1999, an increased effort by the NOPD was made to clean up the Avenue and the blocks north, which were beginning to show signs of seediness, and successfully pushed the drug industry backwards into Central City.
During the flooding of the majority of New Orleans in the aftermath of the levee failures during
Hurricane Katrina in 2005, St. Charles Avenue and the portion of Uptown closer to the river escaped significant flooding.Famous buildings
Notable buildings along St. Charles Avenue include several hotels, perhaps the most famous still in business being the
Pontchartrain Hotel , in business since 1927. The "Columns Hotel" is a small hotel in a 19th century mansion; part of the film "Pretty Baby" was filmed here. The St. Charles Hotel was perhaps the city's most famous hotel through most of the 19th and early 20th century; it was torn down in the 1970s. The Bienville Hotel on Lee Circle is now apartments.The headquarters of the
United Fruit Company was on St. Charles Avenue in the Central Business District.The former mansion of silent film star
Marguerite Clark is now the Milton Latter Memorial branch of theNew Orleans Public Library .Part of the campuses of
Tulane University andLoyola University New Orleans are located on St. Charles Avenue, opposite Audubon Park.Reference notes
*Hogan, C. Michael and Marc Papineau, Earth Metrics Incorporated, "
Phase I Environmental Site Assessment for the Pontchartrain Hotel,New Orleans, Louisiana ", Report Number 10456, March 19, 1990
* [http://books.google.com/books?id=Vbs2JeSNOUEC&pg=PA13&dq=%22Ponchartrain+hotel%22&ei=l8LZRtL1CqHApgKCq92SCw&sig=jSgGJCtZdqFz8jV3KpuIX_k8K5o Staggs, Sam, "When Blanche Met Brando: The Scandalous Story of "A Streetcar Named Desire", p 13, St Martins Press, New York, (2005)]Links
* [http://specialcollections.tulane.edu/SEAAHome.html Southeastern Architectural Archive, Tulane University]
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